Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

You need to know that even so called liberal watchdogs won’t talk about the censored art issues. So what has that got to do with protests against gun violence? Plenty.

Look at some of the 27 censored issues in the arts, culture, and media

1. No protest songs allowed on any mainstream radio in the US,
That means no heart radio will play any songs that address you concerns, yet you are supposed to support their sponsors.

2. Political book deals with massive advances – that seem to suggest buying influence.
That insures politicians get cash for being published, and protestors like you don’t get published and don’t get advances to influence you.

4. 3 CEO’s, all men, control 80% of music (Warners Universal Sony) and 1% of musicians make 70% of the money
That means the only music that gets covered, reviewed, and rewarded is corporate choices of these 3 men – no women. Your fresh protests will never get a real chance.

Sadly you found out how quickly the media switches away from your common sense view to the corporate NRA view. You got about 1 day, and then back to business as usual.

The cost of the F-35 fighter may reach 1.4 trillion. Just one third of that a amount would generate enough interest in CBAs to end poverty in the US without spending a penny of the capital.

Did you know the cost of development of one fighter jet, when put into CBAs or community bank accounts, could generate enough interest to end poverty in the US – and this would not spend a penny of the capital. Compare

1. The cost of the F-35 = $500 billion and counting.

2. The cost to end poverty = Not one cent. The $500 billion is put in community bank accounts, and generates interest. The interest goes to the community, and the capital is never spent.

Which better guarantees security for the US; one plane, or ending poverty within the US permanently.

CBA’s or community bank accounts is a way to end poverty in the US without spending a penny.
Take the money spent on this single plane and put it in local state banks, or credit unions. Then give the monthly interest that it generates to that states poorest cities or counties, one at a time till all have received the monthly interest. Then repeat the process, over and over and over from then on without ever stopping.

The capital is never spent, the interest money keeps coming in forever, and the bank has money that by the CBA rules, it can only loan to those communities too. This empowers the poorest communities with little government interference So there really is no reason now not to end poverty.

We would all work for a cure if 45 million people had a devastating disease. We would find a cure and help them get well. Think of poverty as the disease.

Start with dividing the country into 5 parts of 10 states.
Example, North East, Great Lakes, South, Midwest, West. Then each year for ten years choose one state from each region. Set up a state bank or credit union with 10 Billion dollars. That capital is never spent, the interest that comes in every month from then on forever, goes to that state one county or community at a time. Loans from all that massive money in the bank, can only be loaned to businesses in that state.

The people that live there decide how the money is spent to better help all their community. (Be sure to include D.C. and P.R., etc.). They prepare a budget and keep receipts, with this information open to all to see.

This is a way to end poverty in the US through economic development that builds up the nation. Remember the country had 700 billion it could loan the banks during the banking crisis, and another 500 billion plus for a single plane (F-35). So there is enough to end poverty.

For example: The CBA for one state = 10 billion. That amount invested at a negotiated 6% = 600 million a year or 50 million a month for each and every state from now on. The money never stops coming in.

Like this:

Want to end poverty in the US without spending a penny? Here’s how it might happen.

Good news! Your state has been selected in the regional lottery.
Your state will receive 50 billion dollars in a Community Bank Account. That money is never spent but it helps the state in two ways.

1. The INTEREST goes to ending poverty in the state by empowering the poorest areas to improve.
2. The capital is available for LOANS to businesses in that state. This may be further used to end poverty by being limited to small business and personal loans only.

What’s next?
The state will make a list of the main centers of poverty in the state. They will:

1. Determine a level of annual income or less, that defines poverty. 2. Determine the number of communities in poverty, and make a list.
Most likely there will be entire rural counties, and certain neighborhoods in larger towns and cities.
3. Take the first month’s interest on the 50 billion, and give it to the first name on the list. Next month the second name, etc. When you finish with the first round. Start again at the top, and continue forever!
4. The community (rural county, or city neighborhood), takes the interest they receive and spends it to improve the entire community.
5. Before the community gets the money, they should make a plan on how they will spend the money, how they will budget the money they get. This record, plus any receipts for expenditures, can be reviewed by a state committee, to check to see that the money was well spent. If it was not, the state can stop the program for that community. So there are checks and balances.
6. When the poverty line improves across the poorest areas, more communities may be added to the list.

Local university professor of media, Dr. Nofakusheir, told a representative of zine Musea that he knows for a fact that all the DJs on KXT-fm are robots, mechanical voices.

Here is our interview”

Musea: Why do you say KXT DJs are robots?

Dr Nofakusheir: Four reasons:

1. Fake names – Alan Roberts? Why not Smith and Jones. Generic names, or two first names put together, fit generic machines. Real people have names that are unusual or hard to pronounce.

2 Fake voices – No humans lack all personality. These can’t be humans – these have to be manufactured. No real person has lived twenty years or more without developing some human characteristics.”

3. Show me the pictures. No one has ever SEEN a KXT DJ in person. Where do they live, in Digital Valley?

4. They say they are AAA format. Do you know what that stands for All Automaton Audio.

Musea: What if they are real? They show DJ photos on the website.

Dr Nofakusheir: These white bread generic models are strictly manufactured photos. Obviously these are doctored pix taken from some face recognition tech article or some robot how-to magazine.

But on the slim chance that these are REAL people, we have a bigger problem. The ‘person’ higher up, claiming to program the DJs to talk in such a bland generic way has to be itself a robot. No human has yet devised a way to wipe all personality out of a human being. That stretches credibility.

Musea: The follow, follow up question is this; did real people manufacture these higher higher ups, or did other machines? If other machines, where does this mechanical web end?

Dr Nofakusheir: Yes it’s turtles all the way down! And if machines did NOT hire them, and the DJs are not machines; then I ask this, why would any real humans play music so bland and generic, unless they too were programable automatons.

Further, no human with real personality and even a smattering of skill in music would ever RECORD this pretend music. (Note KXT refers to this pretend music as tracts, not music! Proof in the terms used!) No human with real personality would release such bland music unless under the pressure of all powerful despicable robotic overlords. No musician would allow his name to be used in such a disgraceful way!

Summing up, that means if the DJs are not fake machines, then it has to be the staff that are the machines programming the DJs. And that is why they only allow robotic generic music.

Musea: We have contacted KXT to deny or confirm the professors theory, but as yet cannot get beyond the mechanical digital phone and website menus.